*pr-event with Tallink Silja

Pip: There are ferry crossings, and then there are ferry crossings where someone hands you champagne with wasabi salmon and a dark German porter wrapped in a paper sleeve — INDIVUE has been doing the hard work so we don’t have to wonder.

Mara: This episode covers one tasting event that opens into a full tour of European wine and beer culture, from Baltic shores to French champagne country to the vineyards of Castilla-La Mancha. Let’s start with the flavours themselves.

European Flavours Aboard Tallink Silja Line

Mara: The question here is what it actually means to curate signature drinks for a ferry line — not just stocking a bar, but building pairings that reframe how passengers think about what they’re drinking and eating together.

Pip: The post sets this up with a concrete example from the tasting event. The write-up describes champagne paired with salmon sushi and wasabi, and notes: “The sharp heat of the wasabi and the elegant freshness of the champagne complemented each other in an unforgettable way.”

Mara: That pairing works because the champagne’s acidity cuts through the fat in the salmon while the bubbles reset the palate after the heat — it sounds counterintuitive until you taste it, and that’s exactly the point of a curated event like this.

Pip: And the pairings keep going in unexpected directions. Rosé with grilled corn and spicy peppers. Italian prosecco with cheese and olives — described as light, elegant, and timeless. Even sweet coated popcorn with champagne, which somehow also worked.

Mara: The organic angle is worth noting too. The Spanish wines came from a producer who cultivates his vineyards in Castilla-La Mancha with his father, organically. The post mentions that Tallink Silja has kept organic wines in their signature range going back to at least 2024.

Pip: So the lineup isn’t just European geography as decoration — it’s a deliberate editorial choice about quality and provenance. Which makes the standout all the more earned.

Mara: The standout is the Insel-Brauerei Käpt’ns Baltic Porter from the island of Rügen in northern Germany. The brewery holds multiple World’s Best Beer awards, and the post quotes its pairing guidance directly: “It also pairs beautifully with rich desserts. For a fun and indulgent pairing, try it with chocolate cake, brownies or tiramisu, where the beer’s depth enhances sweet and roasted flavors.”

Pip: Served at the event with a chocolate praline, it became, in the post’s words, the most memorable flavour experience of the entire evening — from someone who had written off dark beers after a disappointing Guinness in Ireland.

Mara: The Estonian lager, the French champagne from Épernay, the Italian Primitivo, the Spanish rosé — the full 2026 to 2028 lineup reads as a shortlist for bringing something genuinely considered home from the ship.

Pip: A bottle in a paper sleeve that also happens to be an aesthetic object. Onboard retail has clearly leveled up.

Mara: And the post notes that the alcohol-free beers from the same range are already sold in Finnish S-markets — which suggests the curation extends well beyond the ship itself.


Pip: Champagne with wasabi, dark porter with chocolate — the lesson seems to be that the combinations you’d never try are sometimes the ones that stay with you.

Mara: European flavour traditions have a lot of ground still to cover. More of that in the next episode.


Read the original article by INDIVUE here

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